Ley defends Coalition’s divisive climate plan
Source: Sky News Australia
Opposition Leader Sussan Ley insists her party still cares about climate action, after business groups blasted the Coalition’s decision to walk away from Australia’s key emission-reduction targets.
Ley did a media blitz on Monday to sell her energy policy, arguing she cared about climate change but government policies needed to prioritise reducing power bills.
She said the Coalition wanted to continue bringing renewables online, but claimed the shift away from fossil fuels like coal and gas was happening too fast.
“It’s an experiment to rely to such a degree on renewable energy,” Ley told ABC Radio.
Speaking on Seven’s Sunrise program, Ley said bringing more gas into the nation’s energy grid would help reduce the price of electricity.
“Australian gas should be for Australians, and we need to make sure that we bring bring power prices down,” she said.
But business groups warned more policy details were needed to properly understand the impact of the Coalition’s approach on company investment.
Australian Industry Group chief executive Innes Willox said the shift meant Labor and the Coalition no longer shared a target of net zero emissions by 2050.
“It’s been a head-spinning few days, quite exhausting really,” Willox told ABC Radio National.
He said after 20 years of climate wars, the issue appeared to be settled for the past few.
“When you start taking away some of the core principles here … that makes business pause to think around well, what comes next? Will there be further upheaval?” he said.
Energy experts have also criticised the plan, describing it as “nonsensical”.
Griffith University Associate Professor Joel Gilmore, an energy systems expert and member of the pro-renewables Climate Council, said net zero was the best way to reduce energy costs.
“It’s very clear that relying on coal and gas is going to be more expensive than renewables,” he said.
“To fight against net zero is fighting against gravity.”
“It’s a nonsensical position to say we can turn back to coal any more than we would turn back to the horse and buggy.”
Ley may now face leadership ructions over the policy move, having angered the moderate wing of her the Liberals, which wanted a commitment to stronger action on climate change.
Conservatives would also prefer to have one of their own in the party’s top job, but say they have no plans to move a leadership spill because they’ve won the fight over climate policy.
Infighting within the Liberal Party has taken a toll on its popularity among voters, with polling published by the Australian Financial Review on Sunday night finding the Coalition’s primary vote fell five percentage points in a month to a poll-record low of 24 per cent.
One Nation rose four points to 18 per cent and Labor also gained four points to 38 per cent.
The poll of 1011 voters also shows Ley with just 10 per cent of voters preferring her as prime minister, compared with 40 per cent for Anthony Albanese.
–AAP
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